Bring your whole self into work, keep your whole self out
Citation:
Alan Eustace, Bring your whole self into work, keep your whole self out, European Labour Law Journal, 16, 1, 2025Download Item:
Abstract:
The theme of this special issue assumes a dichotomy between employees’ free speech and
employers’ business interests. It comes as no surprise to labour lawyers to find the interests of
employees and employers in tension, even fundamental conflict. But despite oceans of ink
spilled in scholarship and media about ‘safe spaces’ and ‘cancel culture’, the nature and scope
of this dichotomy remains underdefined. Far from being a fringe issue, a distraction from
‘bread and roses’ issues of material welfare,1 the present article identifies the ‘worker
expression’ problem as not merely a manifestation of the age-old conflict between workers and
employers, but a contradiction at the heart of labour law itself: between what the article calls
the ‘whole self’ approach on the one hand, and the ‘work-self’ approach on the other.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/eustacalDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Eustace, Alan
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
European Labour Law Journal16
1
Availability:
Full text availableSubject:
Employment law, Labour law, Freedom of expression, Human rightsSubject (TCD):
Identities in Transformation , Inclusive Society , Employment and Labour Law , Human rights , Sociolegal StudiesDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1177/20319525241312773Metadata
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